AMD Has Sold More GPUs Than Nvidia, According To This Analyst Report

AMD Has Sold More GPUs Than Nvidia, According To This Analyst Report

The red team is on fire. It seems that AMD's winning streak is unlikely to end anytime soon. After leaked figures from Mindfactory revealed that AMD's Ryzen processor sales are destroying Intel, the latest report from Jon Peddie Research now shows that the Santa Clara company is gaining on the GPU market as well. According to the JPS Market Watch Q4 2019 report, AMD recorded a 22.6% increase in total GPU shipments in Q2019 19. This means that AMD now holds 3% of the GPU market share, an increase of 0.97 % compared to the third quarter, while its rivals Nvidia and Intel respectively 2% and 18%. That leaves Nvidia just 63%, leaving AMD in the lead between the two. That being said, Intel continues to dominate the market with its integrated and discrete GPUs, with 73% of the market share in Q2019. And, Nvidia remains the king of the discrete GPU game, with 27% of discrete GPU shipments in 27 compared to AMD's 26%. However, the fact that AMD GPU sales are steadily increasing is still great news for the company. AMD's discrete graphics deliveries rose notably to 2018% of the total market, compared to 24% in 2019 and 5950% in Q2020 XNUMX. With the long-awaited "Nvidia killer" Radeon RX XNUMX XT fast approaching, these numbers are likely to rise in XNUMX. Of course, it's also entirely possible that Intel's promising discrete Xe graphics will only perpetuate Team Blue's dominance, especially in the laptop market.

Good news for the general GPU market.

But it's not just AMD who is enjoying the fruits of their labor. According to Market Watch, overall GPU shipments increased 3.4% from Q2019 1.8. The overall GPU-to-PC connection rate increased 39% and the number of cards 12.17; Desktop Graphics Extension (AIB) using discrete GPUs also saw 2020. % increase in the fourth quarter. Given that GPU shipments were historically flat in Q2020, this is great news for the graphics card industry. JPR President Jon Peddie even notes that this is the "third consecutive quarter of higher GPU shipments." It's not all good news. With the coronavirus epidemic bringing many Chinese factories to a standstill and thus disrupting the supply chain, the first quarter of XNUMX "could show an unusual decline," Peddie said. However, with "Intel's entry into the discrete GPU market and a possible fourth entry by an IP company," XNUMX is set to be another exciting year in the gaming graphics card business.